Cheap imports and the loss of U.S. manufacturing jobs

Cooke, A., Kemeny, T. & Rigby, D. (2013). Cheap imports and the loss of U.S. manufacturing jobs. (SERC Discussion Papers SERCDP0148). Spatial Economics Research Centre (SERC), London School of Economics and Political Science.
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This paper examines the role of international trade, and specifically imports from low-wage countries, in determining patterns of job loss in U.S. manufacturing industries between 1992 and 2007. Motivated by intuitions from factor-proportions-inspired work on offshoring and heterogeneous firms in trade, we build industry-level measures of import competition. Combining worker data from the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics dataset, detailed establishment information from the Census of Manufactures, and transaction-level trade data, we find that rising import competition from China and other developing economies increases the likelihood of job loss among manufacturing workers with less than a high school degree; it is not significantly related to job losses for workers with at least a college degree.

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